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Showing posts with label Breastfeeding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Breastfeeding. Show all posts

China Orders Milk Powder Probe After Babies Develop Breasts

Jakarta Globe, August 10, 2010

Beijing. China’s health ministry said Tuesday it had ordered food safety authorities in central Hubei province to investigate claims that milk powder has caused infant girls to grow breasts.

Officials had already begun tests on the baby formula after parents and doctors expressed fears that hormones in the milk powder made by NASDAQ-listed Synutra had caused babies to develop breasts prematurely.

“The Ministry of Health had attached great importance to this issue,” spokesman Deng Haihua told a news conference, according to a transcript.

Local food safety authorities had earlier refused a parent’s request to investigate the formula made by Synutra, based in the eastern city of Qingdao, saying they did not conduct tests at consumers’ behest, state media reported.

Medical tests indicated the levels of hormones in three girls, ranging in age from four- to 15-months and who were fed the same baby formula, exceeded those of the average adult woman, China Daily reported on Monday.

A fourth case was reported in Beijing, Xinhua reported on Tuesday.

The ministry said medical experts were also assisting a separate medical investigation into the cause of the infants’ condition.

Synutra insisted in a statement that its products were safe and that no man-made hormones or illegal substances had been added during production.

The company’s shares plunged 27 percent on Monday in New York to 12.72 dollars, their steepest fall since China’s 2008 tainted milk scandal.

Chinese dairy products were recalled worldwide in 2008 after it was found that melamine, which is used to make plastics, was widely and illegally added to the products to give the appearance of higher protein.

Melamine was found in the products of 22 Chinese dairy companies in a massive scandal blamed for the deaths of at least six infants and for sickening 300,000 others in China.

Agence France-Presse

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Govt confident breast is best: Minister

The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Tue, 08/10/2010 9:53 AM

The Health Ministry expects its breastfeeding campaign will be received well, with the government working on a decree to restrict the advertising of baby formula milk.

“I don’t think there will be much opposition to this,” Health Minister Endang Sedyaningsih said after
the declaration of 10 steps to successful breastfeeding at the Natio-nal Monument (Monas) park on Sunday.

The content of the decree is currently being streamlined with existing regulations, Endang said.

The 10 steps include a public awareness campaign targeting pregnant women, on the importance of breastfeeding; the provision of assistance with early initiation of breastfeeding within the first hour after birth, and breastfeeding on demand; the need to restrict infant intake to only breast milk and the prohibition of pacifiers; and the promotion of breastfeeding support groups in communities.

Endang said the ministry had already initiated efforts to restrict the promotion of baby formula in its own activities.

“As of the beginning of the year we stopped accepting sponsorship from baby formula milk producers, for institutions under the ministry,” she said.

Endang added that the ministry would supervise the implementation of the steps at hospitals, health centers and clinics, and would take measures against institutions that failed to support the program.

Currently, there are no regulations against displaying formula milk advertisements at health centers. Reports from parents also show that many nurses have not trained new mothers how to breastfeed.
In many cases first-time mothers have had difficulty producing
milk and health workers had immediately given formula milk to newborns.

Proponents of breastfeeding
have also deplored advertising claims that formula milk has more nutrients and elements than breastmilk, since breast milk has been proven to be far better for babies than formula.

A national survey carried out between 2004 and 2008 monitored exclusive breastfeeding rates for infants under six months old.

In 2004, the rate reached 58.9 percent and decreased to 56.2 percent in 2008, after an increase to 62.2 percent in 2007.

The new decree is aimed at regulating elements of the 2009 Law on Health, which covers exclusive breastfeeding for babies, restricts formula milk advertising, and makes the establishment of nursery rooms at workplaces mandatory.

It also complies with the International Code of Marketing of Breast-Milk Substitutes, stipulating that there should be absolutely no promotion of breast-milk substitutes, bottles and pacifiers to the general public.

Fransiska Erna Mardiananingsih, a doctor and health advisor at Mercy Corps Indonesia, said the new decree would have firm grounding under the 2009 law, which stipulates that exclusive breastfeeding is a basic human right.

“The decree, complying with an international code, stipulates that breastfeeding should be done unless medically indicated, but only less than 1 percent of babies ever need substitutes for breast-milk,” she said.

She added that a strict application of this code would require that formula purchases be based on medical prescriptions.

“Once there is a law regulating this, and all people have realized the importance of breastfeeding, the sale of formula will naturally decrease,” she said.

At present, 70 percent of formula milk sold in Indonesia is imported, Fransiska said.

“So, in fact, we have nothing to lose. At a micro level, the long-term impact of formula milk feeding is even harder to calculate, for example obesity, which can later cause degenerative diseases in young people such as diabetes and coronary disease,” she said.

Indonesian Lactation Center chief Utami Roesli said the issuance of the decree, which provides guidance on the promotion and marketing of breast milk substitutes, would be a bold step to protect future generations.

“Previously, there was no balanced information comparing breastfeeding and formula, and the regulation tries to counter this,” she said.

“We should not be worried about industries that will possibly be impacted by the decree. Our focus should be on babies and their future,” she said.

According to Utami, breastfeeding reduces infant mortality rates and in the long run protects babies against various physical, neurological and behavioral problems. (lnd)


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